tv CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell CBS February 23, 2023 3:30pm-3:59pm PST
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elevations. >> you hear that vibration that is the deer. their knees are knocking. have a great afternoon. ♪ ♪ >> norah: tonight, a special edition of the "cbs evening news." we are here on one of the largest warships in the world, a u.s. navy aircraft carrier that has just returned from the south china sea. and just today, cbs news learning the pentagon plans to increase the number of troops in taiwan as the independent island hopes to hold off chinese aggression. ♪ ♪ tonight come aboard the uss nimitz, with 5,000 of america's finest, the concern tonight about the possibility of a new cold war. this time with china. ♪ ♪ the u.s. warning china may send weapons to russia for the war in
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e. as t worldar one year of hey will try to do something on this february. >> norah: with tens of billions of taxpayer dollars going to ukraine, cbs's david martin reports on its impact on america's readiness. >> for a couple of key items, the stockpile is getting low. murdaugh wishes to take the stand. >> i did not shoot my wife or my son anytime, ever. >> severe winter weather stretching from coast-to-coast. >> the cold air charging on friday, setting the stage for a huge winter storm in the west. ♪ ♪ >> announcer: this is a special edition of the "cbs evening news" with norah o'donnell, reporting tonight from the uss nimitz. >> norah: good evening, and thank you for joining us. tonight, we are broadcasting live aboard the uss nimitz, and
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while we can't give you our exact location, we can tell you, we are here in the western pacific ocean. we landed here just moments ago, after boarding a seed to greyhound in guam, and landing on the deck of this massive aircraft carrier that stretches nearly 1100 feet long. that is more than three football fi.exact tion o the ship, it is called vultures row. it is a viewing platform, high above the flight deck, where the crew and others can observe the flight operations below. today, the world is marking one year in the war in ukraine, when russia unleashed the largest ground invasion in europe since world war ii. we've got reports tonight from ukraine. with cbs's charlie d'agata, and from the pentagon, with cbs's david martin, who takes an in-depth look at the billions of dollars in military aid for ukraine. all of this, as the u.s.
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prepares for a potential conflict with china. tonight, the u.s. is confirming that they are going to be sending additional troops to taiwan. that is big news bureau it is historic, because the troops will deploy to the crucial islao help build out a training program amid increasing tensions with china. >> narrator: it is here in the western pacific where america's naval power is on full display. the uss nimitz, with more than 60 planes and 5,000 sailors. guam is where we took off from this morning. it is considered the tip of the spirit. one part of the marianas, a strategic location used during world war ii to launch the bombs that's forced to japan to en guam houses three military bases, air force, navy, now a new home to 5,000 marines. the first new u.s. military base in 70 years. part of a new build up in the
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region. defense secretary lloyd austin announcing earlier this month, the u.s. will expand its military presence in the philippines. >> that's just part of our efforts to modernize our alliance. and these efforts are especially important as the people's republic of china continues to advance its illegitimate claims in the west philippine sea. >> norah: take a look at america's military might, from japan know my guam to japan to the philippines, the chinese white minister complaining this week is all an effort to contain china and prevent it from controlling taiwan. >> democracies of the world will stand guard over freedom today, tomorrow, and forever. >> norah: china and russia declared just over a year ago a "no" limits friendship. president xi and putin set to meet again soon. these pictures show war games and joint naval drills involving china and russia happening right now. how closely is xi jinping and china watching the war in
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ukraine? >> xi jinping is likely watching the war in ukraine very closely because it has both diplomatic implications for china, and military implications for china. >> norah: toshi yoshihara has spent s career studessoyinsng as the chinese president considers invading taiwan. >> the first is the nuclear, stable rattling that putin engaged in at the outset of the contest know my contest while putin's nuclear threats do not t from helping ukraine come i think it is clear the united states and its naval allies were very cautious. tookinea pha'stutor iter might be to china's benefit to similarly engage in early nuclear threats. >> norah: republican congressman mike gallagher is a marine veteran and chairs the new house committee focused on china. >> one of the lessons of ukraine is that when dictators tell you they are going to do something,
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you should pay attention. >> norah: president biden has pledged to defend taiwan, setting the u.s. and china up for a possible conflict this decade. >> if this thing really escalated into a conflict, between our navies, that would entail a level of destruction and death that we haven't seen for a long, long time. >> norah: we are seeing firsthand how the navy is preparing for that possible conflict in the western pacific. we will have much more for you tomorrow, and soon on the "6t minutes." tonight, cbs news has learned that the u.s. believes russia will mark the one-year anniversary of the invasion of ukraine with a barrage of missile and drone strikes. cbs's charlie d'agata was in ukraine one year ago when russia launched the largest ground invasion since world war ii, and he reports tonight from kyiv. >> reporter: today, ukrainian troops withstood relentless russian bombardment in vuhledar,
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south of bakhmut, which has been reduced to smoldering ruins after months of heavy battle. this is what russia's lightning advance has come to. grdi crawl. a far cry from a year ago, when u.s. intelligence predicted the capital, kyiv, would fall within 96 hours. we are on the balcony of our safe house in kyiv at around 5:00 a.m. when russian president vladimir putin announced the start of a special military operation. moments later, funders explosions echoed throughout the country. the russians announced air strikes across the nation and ground defenses on multiple fronts. when russian forces advanced toward the capital, hundreds of thousands tried to flee. >> we tried to stop the panic in our streets. people will be fleeing to the
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border, and it will be the obstacle for our armed forces to move quickly. >> reporter: on the streets of kyiv, president volodymyr zelenskyy made it clear he was staying put. instead, he urged citizens to take up arms, which they did, by the thousands. hastily erected barricades and checkpoints went up everywhere. manned by jittery volunteers with guns drawn. overnight, the lives of millions of ukrainians changed forever. and the global repercussions of russia's invasion now extend far beyond the battlefield of ukraine. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy expresses his gratitude to president biden during his unannounced visit here this week for america's support and weapons, but norah, frontline shoulders tell us they are running out of ammunition in the face of a new russian offensive.
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>> norah: charlie d'agata, thank you. with the war now entering its second year at the u.s. continue to provide rockets, guns, and ammunition, there is a growing concern that the u.s. might not have enough military hardware to defend itself and its allies if needed. cbs's david martin is at the pentagon, what a recent war games showed the u.s. would run out of a key weapon while trying to stop a chinese invasion of taiwan. >> reporter: the production line at the lockheed martin plant in arkansas is gearing up to turn out one new rocket every 10 minutes. it's part of a $30 billion in weapons the u.s. has committed to ukraine, but just a fraction of the pentagon staggering $858 billion defense budget. >> this is darn closethegestefet weave ever had. pee on dee w height of the warsn iraq and afghanistan. loren thompson of the lexington institute says nearly a third of that is spent on weapons.
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>> that is an amount of money that outstrips the entire economy of most european countries. >> reporter: yet the pentagon is hard-pressed to keep ukraine supplied with ammunition. >> for a couple of key items, the stockpile is getting low. >> reporter: what does "low" mean? >> we are at a level where the risk for other war plans becomes grave. >> reporter: retired marine colonel mark cancian of the center for strategic and international studies, says ukraine's use of artillery shells are outstrips the pentagon's capacity to make them. >> they are using about as much in a month as we produced in a year. >> reporter: if the u.s. can't keep ukraine supplied in its fight against a decrepit russian military, what would happen to american forces in a war against the number 1 threat, china? speak of the united states was critically short of a couple key munitions, particularly long-range antiship missiles. >> reporter: cancian recently directed a war game in which the u.s. tried to stop a u.s.
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invasion chineseinvasion of taiwan. to they run out of these antiship wind missiles? >> the u.s. ran out of these missiles on the first few days of the war. >> reporter: even though it ran out of the missiles, the u.s. won the war game by stopping the chinese invasion, but lost dozens of ships, hundreds of aircraft, and thousands of troops. norah? >> norah: david martin, thank you. now, to today's others top stories, more than 20 million americans are feeling the impact of two powerful winter storms. does not just blizzard like conditions, but freezing cold, some places saw temperature is 40 degrees below normal. the midwest is getting the worst of it. cbs's christina ruffini is in hard-hit minneapolis. >> reporter: from mountains of snow in minneapolis to a blown transformer in detroit, the february cold snap is sending shivers across the u.s. frozen fallout has left a
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million people without power. in michigan, a volunteer firefighter was killed after coming into contact with a downed power line. heavy snow collapsed part of this parking garage in wisconsin, while the bitter cold broke centuries-old records and parts of colorado, south dakota, and wyoming, where it was negative 26 degrees. separate storms tore across the west, dropping nearly 11 inches of snow in portland, close to a record. sin city got a smattering. >> let it snow, let it snow. >> reporter: and there was a halo, well, hail, in l.a. >> ow. >> reporter: more than 1,000 flights canceled and more than 4,000 delayed. >> we changed our flights three times and now this is going to be the fourth. >> reporter: now, as folks around here start to dig out, another storm is heading towards california. the golden state could get as much as a foot, and the national weather service has issued its
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first blizzard warning for the southern california mountains since 1989. norah? >> norah: christina ruffini, thank you. it was a big day in the double murder trial of disgraced former attorney alex murdaugh. murdaugh took the stand, sobbing at times. he surprisingly admitted he lied to police. cbs's scott macfarlane was in yes, ma'am.rolina >> reporter: just moments after taking the stand from alex murdaugh, part of a family legal dynasty in south carolina, denied being a murderer. >> i didn't shoot my wife or my son anytime. ever. >> reporter: but he admitted lying to police about being at the crime scene. the family's dog kennel just bee killings. he blamed paranoia and an opioid addiction. >> you continued lying after that night, did you not? >> once i lied, i continued to lie, yes, sir. >> why? >> oh, what a tangled web we weave. >> reporter: his attorneys
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played murdaugh's 911 call in june 2021. >> no, no. >> reporter: he testified he attempted suicide. >> i meant for him to shoot me so i would be gone. >> reporter: and acknowledged stealing money from his legal practice. >> i was spending so much money on pills. >> reporter: . >> reporter: prosecutors argued he killed to distract from his financial misdeeds. late today, they sought to poke holes in murdaugh's credibility. >> you had to sit down with these people and convince them you're telling them the truth in order to steal this money, correct? >> i can't say that. i can say i did wrong. i stole money that wasn't mine. and i shouldn't have done it. >> reporter: his surviving son testified murdaugh was a loving father. he sat with other relatives who were in the courtroom today and grew emotional when murdaugh did. cross examination resumes here. norah? >> norah: scott macfarlane, thank you. a tv reporter covering a
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body cam video shows orange county sheriff's deputies arresting 19-year-old keith melvin moses, the suspected shooter. >> we recovered a glock 40 semiautomatic handgun from inside his pants. that gun was still hot to the touch. it had just been fired. >> reporter: he is accused of murdering a woman a woman in this orlando neighborhood, hours later to return and fire on a reporter and photographer covering the story and then the home. 9-year-old t'yonna major was killed, along with jou reporter dylan lyons. reporters were shaken. >> you go home at night afraid something like this will occur. >> reporter: colleagues and friends are paying tribute to lyons, who was 24 years old and engaged to be married. >> he loved the community, telling stories and reporting the news. he was just passionate.
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>> reporter: jesse walden, the news photographer, the mother of a 9-year-old girl, remain in this hospital tonight. the sheriff said the suspect has a long criminal history, but he is not talking, so they have not been able to determine a mode of. norah? >> norah: manny bojorquez, thank you. federal investigators released their preliminary report into that toxic train derailment in ohio. that's next. out on tour, i gotta help protect myself. ♪ that's why i got this guy— a new updated covid-19 booster designed for better protection against recent omicron variants. you're still my guy, khalil. i love you buddy. ♪
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>> norah: the other big story today, transportation secretary pete buttigieg visited the site of that toxic train derailment in ohio, just as federal investigators released their preliminary findings. their report confirms that a wheel bearing severely overheated to more than 250 degrees above normal. the crew received an alert and tried to slow down just before the wreck. state environmental officials now estimate that more than 40,000 fish have died from toxic contamination in nearby waterways. there is a big development in
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the special counsel investigation into the january 6th attack on the u.s. capital. cbs news is first to report that federal prosecutors have asked a federal judge to compel former vice president mike pence to testify in that investigation. lawyers from former president trump are trying to block pence's testimony, arguing that private conversations with the president should remain confidential. when we come back, we will check in with a family that fled the violence in ukraine and found comfort and safety in the home of a stranger. that's next. >> announcer: this portion of the "cbs evening news" is sponsored by united healthcare medicare plans. get medicare with more. e most out of her medicare plan. ♪wow, uh-huh♪ advantage: me! can't wait 'til i turn 65! take advantage with an aarp medicare advantage plan... only from unitedhealthcare. she found it. the feeling of finding the psoriasis treatment she's been looking for.
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get back to better breathing. and get back to your life. ask your doctor about fasenra. if you can't afford your medication, azle t >> norah: finally tonight, as we mark one year of the russian invasion of ukraine, we wanted to check in on a family we met while visiting poland last year. >> when we first met ola, her family had just fled the violene in ukraine. the family left in such a hurry, with only a few clothes, leaving behind loved ones, including their dogs and cats. last year, ola told us she didn't know where they were going or where they would end up, but were happy to be in poland. one year later. wonderful to see you. >> it is wonderful to see you. >> so glad to see you. >> norah: they are still in poland, in the same house, with the woman who was once a stranger.
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barbara, a retiree in warsaw, gave up her bed for the family of four periods has barbara become part of your family? >> yes, part of our family, number one. >> norah: little rima an 18-year-old veronika are in school, learning polish and doing well, but the memories of their old life linger. >> i left my best friend, anna, at my prior school. >> norah: a year ago, they were happy to have a place to stay. but now, with no end in sight for the war, the hope of returning home is diminishing. ola, what is your hope for the future? >> hope the war will end soon, and i know it is going to take some time to recover, but i believe that my country is strong. >> norah: strong like ola, leaving all she knows behind and starting over. and that is tonight's "cbs evening news" from the uss nimitz in the western
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pacific ocean. i'm norah o'donnell. good night. ♪ ♪ - [justin] black history is american history. so we look back, remembering our stories define us. and when you do that, what do you see? i see passion from the past. - we are the sons of mary. - [justin] progress into the future. our stories, our legacy. blackness in the bay, changing a nation. a celebration of being black no matter the month. so join us as we honor yesterday's history, celebrate today's stories, and move forward to tomorrow's progress. (gentle music) welcome to cbs news bay area's black history special, "black in the bay." i'm justin andrews. - and i'm jan mabry. we are proud to celebrate black history month. that's our focus today, celebration. - and celebration is so important, and honestly, we don't get enough of it in our community.
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